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The Views of Old Age Expressed in Warning and Old Man, Old Man

2024-01-22 13:07:28

Old concept of warning and old man, old man's poet "warning" and "old man, old man" have greatly changed the view of the later years. "Grandfather, grandfather" is an old man who encountered many problems in old age, and reviewed all what he did since young. Looking forward to the old, dreaming of excitement and pleasure, these two poems can be thought of as being almost opposite.

When I read the "Crossroads" section of the book "My Tracks", I noticed that the view of the poems of old "Old Man", "Old Man" and "Warning" are very different. "Warning" written by Jenny Joseph shows a positive view of old age depicted in the title. Joseph cautiously said, "As I am coming, be careful." However, Fanta Rope's poem "Old man, old man" immediately showed a negative attitude. By repeated "old man" we can already assume that we sympathize with the old man. In my article I will try to verify their independent aging vision by comparing the two poems.

By reading these two poems, I noticed that older people had a great influence on my life and how they spent this time depends on them. Fanthorpe and Jenny Joseph's "warning" of the UN's "Older, Older" have interpretations of different age groups from different angles. "Grandfather, grandfather" can be seen as the old form of the stereotypes mentioned in "Warnings" and shows us that he does not want to be like a man. Even though it is experience, while other things are different experiences, this understanding of old age is common to all verses.

The old man's speech seems to be related to the suffering of the elderly, but this pain seems to have been given by God and means to store goodwill. The background of the old man's speech should not be ignored - this is his evil sermon "Cupiditas". Old man's breasts are often characterized by old medieval expression of old age and become a symbol of ordinary goods that people accumulate in men's life and are often accompanied by "coveitsye". Person's story is actually a typical medieval commentary on seven deadly sins and provides an interesting gloss about the meaning of "Cupiditas" accused by slander. In particular, some of De Avaritia contains interesting insights about the concept of medieval greed and greed and its various outcomes.